Travel Junkie
Well-Known Member
All part of the plan. Much like creating their own Star Wars story in GE, Disney is immersing guests into living their own Matterhorn adventure, complete with real life rock slides!
It's Disneyland in 2003 all over again! It's all magic and pixie dust until someone dies due to poor maintenance. I guess that one way to get new leadership.
You really think the current Disney would want to construct a non-ip ride?I say Disney uses this as an opportunity to tear down the Matterhorn and construct this old concept for Magic Kingdom in its place.
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It was poor maintenance. So was the falling of the tiki perch at the Adventureland entrance.Are you referring to Big Thunder? Was that incident due to poor maintenance? I know a wheel jammed but not sure what the cause of that was..
Matterhorn's basically an IP at this point, right? At sixty years old it's a unique and iconic part of Disneyland's identity. More people have probably ridden the Matterhorn than have seen Frozen.You really think the current Disney would want to construct a non-ip ride?
Yes.Are you referring to Big Thunder? Was that incident due to poor maintenance? I know a wheel jammed but not sure what the cause of that was..
That’s not an old concept nor is it a Disney concept. As written in the corner, it is from ImagineeringDisney.com.I say Disney uses this as an opportunity to tear down the Matterhorn and construct this old concept for Magic Kingdom in its place.
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I don't know how I could be so dumb for so long.That’s not an old concept nor is it a Disney concept. As written in the corner, it is from ImagineeringDisney.com.
As long the scale and general layout is the same.I say Disney uses this as an opportunity to tear down the Matterhorn and construct this old concept for Magic Kingdom in its place.
View attachment 397109
Yes.
- On September 5, 2003, a 22-year-old man died after suffering severe blunt force trauma and extensive internal bleeding in a derailment of the Big Thunder Mountain Railroad roller coaster that also injured ten other riders.[24] The cause of the accident was determined to be improper maintenance.[25] Investigation reports and discovery by the victim's attorney confirmed the fatal injuries occurred when the first passenger car collided with the underside of the locomotive. The derailment was the result of a mechanical failure which occurred due to omissions during a maintenance procedure. Fasteners on the left side upstop/guide wheel on the floating axle of the locomotive were not tightened and safetied in accordance with specifications. As the train entered a tunnel, the axle came loose and jammed against a brake section, causing the locomotive to become airborne and hit the ceiling of the tunnel. The locomotive then fell on top of the first passenger car, crushing the victim.[26] Some people blamed the new cost-conscious maintenance culture brought in by Paul Pressler and consultants McKinsey & Company in 1997, which included Reliability-centered maintenance.[27]
That’s not an old concept nor is it a Disney concept. As written in the corner, it is from ImagineeringDisney.com.
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